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Some Alaskan salmon fisheries lose Ocean Wise label amid concern for B.C.-bound stock

VANCOUVER — Vancouver-based seafood sustainability group Ocean Wise has removed its recommended designation from southeast Alaskan salmon fisheries.
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A 24-pound Chinook salmon sits on the dock in Vancouver, B.C., on Aug. 18, 2012. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck

VANCOUVER — Vancouver-based seafood sustainability group Ocean Wise has removed its recommended designation from southeast Alaskan salmon fisheries.

It says there are questions about the impact of the fisheries on Chinook, coho and other salmon species as they head south towards British Columbia, and the effect on the southern resident killer whales that feed on the fish.

The decision means salmon caught by purse seine, drift gillnet, and troll fishing in southeast Alaska can no longer carry the Ocean Wise label.

B.C. conservation groups the Watershed Watch Salmon Society, SkeenaWild Conservation Trust, and Raincoast Conservation Foundation said in a statement Thursday they are "very pleased" by the decision.

The groups had raised objections to the Alaskan "interception fisheries" that they say target migrating salmon whose home rivers are in British Columbia, Washington, Oregon, and California.

Salmon caught in a variety of B.C. fisheries retain the Ocean Wise recommended designation as a result of a report issued in May.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 11, 2024.

The Canadian Press